A new online tool charts a commodities’ journey from production to consumption, and can aid companies and practitioners’ efforts to cleanse deforestation from supply chains. The sector is calling for more transparency tools as it faces greater policy uncertainty with the election of Donald Trump as President of the United States.

16 November 2016 | MARRAKESH | Morocco | Nearly 200 companies have endorsed the New York Declaration on Forests (NYDF) – a ten-goal pledge to save the world’s forests. Until now, however, watchdogs have had little way of knowing if those companies are actually keeping their promises, while companies themselves have often struggled to find ways of delivering them.

Several transparency initiatives were either launched or announced at this year’s climate talks in Marrakesh, Morocco, including more than a dozen research papers and at least two new tracking platforms. The Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), for example, launched a satellite-based deforestation tracker at the Global Landscapes Forum, which CIFOR hosts alongside the formal talks, while the Global Canopy Programme and Stockholm Environment Institute launched a platform called TRASE, (Transparency for Sustainable Economies), which makes it possible to track soybeans from specific municipalities in Brazil, through traders, to end countries.

On the research front, the NGO Climate Focus published a progress report on the NYDF, focusing on the second of its ten goals , which is to “Support and help meet the private-sector goal of eliminating deforestation from the production of agricultural commodities such as palm oil, soy, paper, and beef products by no later than 2020, recognizing that many companies have even more ambitious targets.”

NYDF: Breaking Down the Commitments

Goal 2 is broken into four parts with indicators to go along with each. The second part, for instance, is implementation of private sector commitments, and indicators explore if a company adopted policies related to deforestation.

The fourth part, however, tracks the overall impact a companies’ pledge is having on reducing forest loss, and Climate Focus’ new assessment on the NYDF wasn’t able to report any progress because there is currently no available data to determine whether corporate commitments to reduce deforestation are translating into real reductions.

“We have almost no way of monitoring the effectiveness of these private sector pledges, if they are implemented successfully and whether they are resulting in a reduction of tropical deforestation,” the Co-founder and Director of Climate Focus Charlotte Streck said during an event in Marrakesh.

“It’s difficult to make the connection between the commitment by the company and the actual reduction of deforestation on the ground,” said Marco Albani, the Director of Tropical Forest Alliance (TFA) 2020, an umbrella organization uniting the efforts of several entities including companies and governments to end deforestation tied to forest risk commodities. He mentions other factors affecting land-use such as national and sub-national policies and smallholder farmer activities.

Tracking and Monitoring

The CIFOR initiative uses satellite technology, combined with information from the Indonesian government, to differentiate oil palm and pulpwood companies who practice deforestation from those who don’t. It launched today with full coverage of Borneo in Southeast Asia, the world’s largest source of palm oil and a significant source of pulpwood.

Trase, on the other hand, is a digital tool that tracks commodities from the place of production to the countries of consumption.

“A major blocker toward the zero deforestation economy is supply chain complexity and supply chain opacity,” Niki Mardas, the Executive Director of Global Canopy Programme, said. “There’s an urgent need for a breakthrough in transparency and to move toward a more radical transparency.”

Such transparency has become key at climate talks here, especially with the uncertainty introduced by the election of Donald Trump as President of the United States. Trase will work in coordination with Forest Trends’ Supply Change, which tracks corporate disclosure and action related to deforestation and informed the NYDF report, and other initiatives including the Forest 500 and Global Forest Watch.

“We’ve made it clear upfront that this work can’t be done in isolation. There’s a difference in data sources and there is an opportunity to blend these two together,” said Stephen Donofrio, a Senior Advisor at Forest Trends (Ecosystem Marketplace’s publisher) and the Project Lead of Supply Change. “If Supply Change is collecting information about what companies are reporting, we can use on the ground data that can be combined and merged into that to see how full and accurate and truthful, in a sense, but also comprehensive the company reporting is, which is what stakeholders are consuming to evaluate companies’ commitments and their progress.”

Solving the Supply Change Transparency Problem

“We’ve had huge advances in spatial monitoring and satellite monitoring perhaps best embodied by Global Forest Watch so we can see more closely into places and the impacts in those places,” Mardas said.

Despite these advancements, though, there is still a gap in linking downstream actors – those with the strongest commitments – with what’s happening on the ground, he added.

“Very often the companies don’t have the spatially explicit data. It is difficult for them to even meet their commitments or check on their suppliers,” Streck said, noting that this is an essential part of the monitoring system. “They don’t have the data. The suppliers don’t have the data and the jurisdictions don’t have the data.”

Though, we shouldn’t feel too disheartened about the lack of information on the origins of commodities as companies have never been asked to keep track of where their commodities come from, Albani said.

“It’s not surprising that people don’t know where things come from. That’s not the point of a commodity. You just buy it,” Albani explained. “But now we’re asking the commodity markets to change and start to care about where things come from, and it’s changing how companies do business.”

Tools such as Trase and CIFOR’s tracker can help. Trase also includes data on deforestation, biodiversity and conservation risks as well as information on social and governance conditions.

“The nature of this data is that it covers the entire sector so we get a very broad blanket of coverage but also granular enough to inform decision-making,” Mardas said.

Trase is currently in beta and while it only covers soy exported from Brazil right now, developers plan to cover all commodities associated with tropical deforestation.

Reporting Progress and Problems

As practitioners move to increase transparency, the private sector continues to ramp up their commitments to reduce forest loss. The current total sits at 415 companies and 701 commitments with the lion’s share addressing palm oil and wood products. Commitments to soy and cattle drop considerably below palm and wood, which is a significant concern as cattle has a deforestation footprint nine times larger than that of palm, report authors write.

“The good news is that global supply chain movement continues to gain momentum,” Donofrio said, speaking on findings and trends of this year’s NYDF assessment.

The majority of companies that have made pledges are manufacturers and retailers headquartered in the US, Europe and Australia though Donofrio notes that trend may be changing. More palm oil producers in Southeast Asia and meat processing companies in Brazil are making commitments of their own.

Meanwhile, NYDF and TFA 2020 endorsers continue to lead the pack in adopting commitments and implementing policies across all supply chains.

Albani, like many in the space, note the progress the report shows – but also the dwindling time to act.

“The goal of TFA 2020 is to end deforestation in supply chains by 2020. And we’re at 2016,” he said. So we’re definitely worried that there’s a lot more than needs to be done in a relatively short time.”